"It sounded like there was like a hurricane in my ears."
Envy Envy Inactive Marved Jimmy Nguyen Victor Victor Wong crashies Austin Roberts FiNESSE Pujan Mehta yay Jaccob Whiteaker 's Jaccob "yay" Whiteaker was in a similar boat as many other players in the opening few days of Masters: Berlin.
The stage was incredible. The arena was great. The audio was detrimental.
Kim "Efina" Nak-yeon (김낙연) reached for his headset in excitement while playing on the fourth day of Masters: Berlin competition. (Photo by Lance Skundrich/Riot Games)
LAN events often have to hit the right balance when it comes to audio for competitors. Players need to be able to hear game sounds and their teammates, but if they hear the in-arena caster audio, the other team on stage with them, or hear the crowd too well, the competitive integrity of the event is put into jeopardy by various sound cues to give away positioning and plays.
"Most LANs use sound-proof booths or in-ears for the audio with the noise-cancelling headphones on top," says Papara SuperMassive Papara SuperMassive Europe Rank #14 skylen Asil Yalçın ip0TT Yiğit Karadeniz VenTT Emre Bozkurt Celasun Emir Celasun umu7 Umut Pekdoğan coach Tanishq "Tanizhq" Sabharwal says. These setups still prevent the players from hearing the outside world without hampering their ability to hear in-game audio or teammates.
But players at Masters: Berlin were just given a single pair of headphones. When yay heard his personal auditory hurricane, he assumed they would be given in-ear headphones similar to past LAN events. He was wrong.
Instead, team communication, in-game audio, and the white noise to cancel out background noise all filtered into players' ears through a single headset. Even worse, the white noise was way too loud.
"That meant we couldn't hear any footsteps and most utility (Raze satchels, Sova drone, Sage wall/slows, Jett dash etc)," Tanizhq explained. "And if we increased the volume, the gunshots were deafening and you couldn't hear teammates anymore. There was no good mid-point between them."
In a game like Valorant in which players make decisions based off of sound cues, this issue had the potential of hampering the very competitive integrity white noise is supposed to maintain. And the players were quick to talk about it.
ZETA DIVISION ZETA DIVISION Japan Rank #2 Dep Yuma Hashimoto SugarZ3ro Shota Watanabe CLZ Hikaru Mizutani SyouTa Shota Aoki Xdll Yuto Mizomori heard about the audio issues a day before their first match from another team. "We tried to plan under the circumstance we would be hearing well," Ushida "Laz" Koji said.
ZETA would have heard of the issues on Saturday, September 11. That was also the day players, coaches, and managers also made the issue increasingly public.
Riot, for their part, has tried to fix the issue to some extent, according to the players.
"I think they changed it on the first day a little bit," yay, who played on the second and fourth days of the tournament, said. "They lowered it slightly, but it was still super hard to hear footsteps, especially at a medium distance. And even certain ultimates and dashes, I couldn't hear."
But the issues persisted into Sunday morning. Eventually, Riot delayed the match between Sentinels Sentinels North America Rank #4 N4RRATE Marshall Massey bang Sean Bezerra Zellsis Jordan Montemurro zekken Zachary Patrone johnqt Mohamed Amine Ouarid and G2 Esports G2 Esports Inactive to move the casters further away from the players so they could lower the white noise of the headphones further.
We will continue to actively improve the situation as the event progresses.
The players who spoke about the audio issues were all in agreement the audio is still far from perfect, but they disagreed on the extent the further changes helped.
"At least with the changes they've made so far, it's definitely a dramatic difference," yay said. "I can hear stuff a lot better, and I think it's at least playable. It's isn't 100% ideal, but it's definitely playable. It's not like how it was before where it was costing you actual rounds or potentially the game."
"The levels were improved a bit. That's really all they can do, I guess, is improve levels of white noise at this point," 100 Thieves 100 Thieves North America Rank #7 zander Alexander Dituri Cryocells Matthew Panganiban eeiu Daniel Vucenovic Boostio Kelden Pupello Asuna Peter Mazuryk ' Ethan "Ethan" Arnold said. "The sound quality is always going to be the same. I don't think it's as good as in Counter-Strike where you had in-ears. I think in-ear sound quality is the best you can get."
The sound quality was overwhelmingly the most common gripe about the audio following Sunday's change.
"The difference is very small because we don't have dedicated sound cards," Žygimantas "nukkye" Chmieliauskas of G2 said. "The sound of the headset — the quality of it is pretty bad. It's better, but not as good as it would be with proper settings."
100 Thieves veteran Spencer "Hiko" Martin explained on his stream why he thought the audio still wasn't great even after playing a match with the improved white noise volume. He listed audio quality and an inability to directly change teammates' volumes as part of his issue.
Hiko, like many of the other players and coaches, believed in-ear headphones would solve the issues.
According to Acend Acend Inactive ALIVE Gilad Hakim musashi Alessio Xhaferi pyrolll Artur Minin cullumx Nikolaj Cullum Andersen chiwa Egor Stepanyuk manager Mark "Krimson" Senior's tweet on Saturday, Riot said there would be no in-ear headphones for Berlin but they would be provided for future events. While that's good news for the VCT's crown jewel, Champions, it's bad news for competitors in Berlin.
"It is what it is," Ethan said. "We're trying to make do with what we can get right now. They're taking constructive criticism, for sure. So I mean, they're changing it every day, it seems like, for what we want. So at least they're doing that."
With or without in-ear headsets, Riot has been quick with changes and players have noticed. Hopefully continued improvements at Berlin and better setups at future events make this brief saga a minor footnote in Valorant tournament history.